People Moves
Morgan Stanley CEO Signals He Plans To Retire
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Holding the CEO post since 2010, James Gorman has told his firm's annual meeting that he intends to retire as chief executive over the next 12 months and take on the executive chairmanship role.
James Gorman, who has been at the helm of Morgan Stanley since
2010 as it recovered from almost failing in the 2008
financial crisis, intends to depart as chief executive within the
next year and assume the role of executive chairman.
“It is the board’s and my expectation that it will occur at some
point in the next 12 months,” Gorman, 64, was quoted by many
media outlets on Friday as saying. He spoke at the US firm’s
annual meeting. “That is the current expectation in the absence
of a major change in the external environment.”
His tenure as CEO at the helm of one of the largest banks and
wealth managers in the US has seen the firm recover from what had
been a perilous time in the 2008 financial crisis. The firm’s
broker-dealer and investment advisory offerings are some of the
most established in the US market.
Gorman, who joined the Wall Street house in February
2006, became CEO in January 2010 and chairman in January 2012.
Before joining Morgan Stanley, Gorman held a succession of
executive positions at Merrill Lynch. Prior to this, he was a
senior partner of McKinsey & Co.
In April, the firm reported making net revenues of $14.5 billion
for Q1 2023, down from $14.8 billion a year ago. Net income
applicable to shareholders was $3 billion, down from $3.7 billion
a year before. At its wealth management business, net revenues
rose in Q1 to $6.6 billion from $5.9 billion a year before, it
said in a statement yesterday. On the asset management side,
revenues were hit by falling asset levels. Net interest income
rose as central bank interest rates rose.